Description: Gene Krupa Plays Fours With Benny Goodman, Drum Music, Drum Solos, instrumental music, royalty free sounds and business music
Keywords: Gene Krupa Plays Fours With Benny Goodman, instrumental music, royalty free sounds, business music, music loops, world music, music for video, buyout music, stock music, cheap royalty free music, royalty free music, commercial music, cheap production music, production music library, television music, stock music clips, film music, royalty free music loops, production music, download music clips, tv music, company music, royalty-free songs, websites music, music clips, royalty-free production music, royalty free sound, corporate music, royalty-free music, music licensing, cavendish production music, music siock, film production, Benny Goodman Gene Krupa King of Swing drum solos world war two veterans jitterbug history beat patriotic victory tribute modern wave files dance retired hero's In December 1934, Gene Krupa joined Benny Goodman's band, where his featured drum work made him a national celebrity His tom-tom interludes on their hit "Sing, Sing, Sing" were the first extended drum solos to be recorded commercially However, "artistic and personal disputes" with Goodman prompted Krupa to leave the group and form his own orchestra, shortly after the famous Carnegie Hall concert in January 1938 He appeared in the 1941 film Ball of Fire, in which he and his band perform an extended version of the hit "Drum Boogie", sung by Barbara Stanwyck whose singing was dubbed by Martha Tilton, which he had composed with trumpeter Roy Eldridge As an encore to this piece, he plays a tamer version of the same song using matchsticks as drumsticks and a matchbox as a drum, while Stanwyck and the audience sing along In 1943 Based on the Benny Goodman Band showing off Krupa style solos these are unavailable elsewhere as modern recordings
|